pikehunter Posted November 10, 2007 Report Posted November 10, 2007 It's like it's baked on and consists of a mixture of water surface scum, oil, unburned fuel and whatever else could possibly be caked on there. When I asked the boat mechanic where I bought a couple of years ago his answer was "Oven cleaner." I tried oven cleaner last year, it did work but still required some elbow grease. My problem with oven cleaner is that it is very corrosive and I would prefer to use something else. OC can't be too good for the painted surface after repeated use and what could any overspray do the the aluminum boats painted or bare finish? I kind of want to get everything all spic and span for winter storage and am greatful if anyone has any tips Thanks.
Greencoachdog Posted November 10, 2007 Report Posted November 10, 2007 (edited) Try Citrus stripper, sold in the paint department at wal-mart... smells like oranges and has no noxious fumes. Edited November 10, 2007 by Greencoachdog
Guest skeeter99 Posted November 10, 2007 Report Posted November 10, 2007 swish toilet bowl cleaner or zep toilet bowl cleaner(home depot) will take anything off or what I sometimes do which is not as corrosive is some good cleaner wax apply liberally and polish off (yes a little elbow grease) but comes out like a showroom shine, clean first with acid then polish
Jer Posted November 10, 2007 Report Posted November 10, 2007 "Swish"...yes "Zep"...no Similiar to the citrus stripper is Swish Citro-Gleam.
Beans Posted November 10, 2007 Report Posted November 10, 2007 Pressure washer set on light spray ("wash") setting...
irishfield Posted November 10, 2007 Report Posted November 10, 2007 Starbrite hull cleaner seems to clean everything up for me.
Gerritt Posted November 10, 2007 Report Posted November 10, 2007 http://www.cromac.ca These guys carry the BEST cleaners and strippers of any company I have ever dealt with....(They are the Manufacturer) And service the metals industry Gerritt.
Muskieman Posted November 10, 2007 Report Posted November 10, 2007 Brake Kleen .... Muriatic Acid 30% followed by a Baking Soda rub-down [ neutralizes the acid], wash down with warm soapy water,dry off , apply coat of oil with rag or brush. some performance enthusiasts still do this with crankshafts when they rebuild the engines.
pikehunter Posted November 11, 2007 Author Report Posted November 11, 2007 Thanks for the ideas. The toilet bowl cleaner or Starbright sound like they could do the trick without being so caustic as oven cleaner.
boatman Posted November 11, 2007 Report Posted November 11, 2007 Just make sure you don't allow any of the cleaners to run down the shaft and contact the rubber driveshaft seal. Remove the water pump and housing and wrap a rag or something around it before you start.
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